Mutagenesis drives natural selection. In the lab, mutations allow gene function to be deciphered. C. elegans is highly amendable to functional genetics because of its short generation time, ease of use, and wealth of available gene-alteration
techniques. Here we provide an overview of historical and contemporary methods for mutagenesis in C. elegans, and discuss principles and strategies for forward (genome-wide mutagenesis) and reverse (target-selected and gene-specific
mutagenesis) genetic studies in this animal.

1. Introduction

Mutations are the engine of natural selection and arise spontaneously through a myriad of mechanisms (Nei, 2007). In C. elegans, spontaneous point mutations, gene duplications, and deletions arise at rates of 2 × 10−8, 3.4 × 10−7, and 2.2 × 10−7 per gene per generation, respectively (Denver et al., 2004; Lipinski et al., 2011). These alterations to the genome result from replication and repair errors, endogenous oxidative damage, and exogenous environmental
insults (Denver et al., 2009). Cosmic rays bombard the atmosphere of the Earth at a rate of approximately 2 × 1018 particles per second (Reedy et al., 1983), and they can also contribute to mutational load (Babcock and Collins, 1929). C. elegans has been used to study the effects of cosmic rays aboard the International Space Station (Zhao et al., 2006). Despite exposure to an average radiation dose of 10-12 mRad/day (approximately 150 times higher than exposure on the surface
of the Earth (Ohnishi and Ohnishi, 2004)), no significant differences in mutation rates were detected over an 11-day period (Zhao et al., 2006), suggesting that DNA repair mechanisms must correct most mutations efficiently, and that spontaneous alterations to the
genome may largely result from cell-intrinsic errors.

Mutations are important tools for gene function discovery. Forward and reverse genetic strategies rely on mutations to identify
and characterize genes involved in a biological process of interest. A causal connection between mutation and phenotype can
suggest mechanisms of wild-type gene action and can be used for diagnostic prediction. While gene function can be interrogated
through targeted knockdown of RNAs using RNA interference (RNAi) (Fire et al., 1998), identification of genomic lesions in genes has several advantages. For example, the functions of genes that are not susceptible
to RNAi can be assessed. Special alleles of genes whose inactivation leads to lethality, or that function redundantly, can
also be identified (Muller, 1932). Temperature sensitive alleles allow for temporal assessment of gene activity (Hartwell et al., 1974), and single-gene mutations defining an allelic series can be used to study protein structure-function relationships (Jorgensen and Mango, 2002). Finally, while RNAi experiments sometimes give variable results (Kamath and Ahringer, 2003), genomic lesions tend to produce consistent phenotypic changes more suitable for quantitative analysis.

For spontaneous mutations to be an effective tool, roughly 1/(mutation rate) organisms must be screened to identify lesions
in a particular gene. Often, one must screen well above this number. Although this is easily achieved in bacteria or yeast,
the number is prohibitively high for other organisms, including C. elegans. Fortunately, the work of Muller (1927) demonstrated that mutation rates can be artificially enhanced by a variety of genotoxic agents. Practically, such treatments
must maintain a balance between administration of sufficient damage (to reduce the numbers of queried animals) and animal
lethality/sterility. In C. elegans, typical mutagenesis compatible with this balance inflicts 10−3 to 10−4 mutations per gene per generation (Gengyo-Ando and Mitani, 2000).

This chapter provides an overview of historical and current methods for gene mutagenesis in C. elegans. Three mutagenesis strategies are commonly used: genome-wide mutagenesis, in which unknown genes controlling a biological
process are sought (forward genetics); target-selected mutagenesis, in which the entire genome is mutagenized but mutations
in a known single gene are screened (reverse genetics); and gene-targeted mutagenesis, in which only a single gene is targeted
for mutagenesis (reverse genetics). Method rationales and protocols are outlined, and are meant to serve as an introduction
to aid researchers in identifying mutagenesis methods suitable to their goals (Table 1). Detailed protocols for each method are not presented for most methods, but are referenced and should be carefully followed
when implemented in the laboratory.

Table 1. Overview of mutagenesis methods. Three types of mutagenesis are discussed in this review: whole-genome, target-selected, and gene-targeted mutagenesis. The
different types and variations of each method are given; a general purpose and references for each technique are listed. Advantages
and disadvantages of each method are discussed further in the text.

2. Genome-wide mutagenesis

Non-directed genome-wide mutagenesis is commonly used for forward genetic screens, where mutants defective in a biological
process of interest are sought. Mutagenesis can be accomplished with a variety of chemical agents, each offering a specific
array of favored lesions and mutation frequencies. Ionizing radiation mutagenesis is used to generate large deletions or complex
rearrangements. Alternatively, mutagenesis is achieved with transposon insertion, using either the endogenous transposons
already present in the nematode or an exogenous Mos1 transposon.

2.1. Strategies for forward genetic screens

Prior to embarking on genome-wide mutagenesis, a screen must be designed to identify mutant animals defective in the biological
process under study. A thorough review of the various types of genetic screens in C. elegans has been previously published and should be consulted (Jorgensen and Mango, 2002). The most common screen involves identifying recessive mutations exposed in second-generation (F2) animals of a mutagenized
parental strain (P0, Figure 1). Typically, P0 hermaphrodites are mutagenized at the late L4 or early adult stages. F1 progeny, heterozygous for many induced
mutations, are then allowed to self, and F2 animals are screened for the phenotype of interest. Many variations on this screen
exist, and each screen should be carefully constructed to find enough mutants for the phenotype of interest (Jorgensen and Mango, 2002). Because some genetic screens can be demanding in effort and time, it is prudent to optimize the ratio of F2-to-F1 animals
assayed (Shaham, 2007). Calculations for the amount of effort required per screen center on whether F1 or F2 animals must be plated individually.
We previously set up a web calculator to aid in evaluating optimal screen parameters (http://shahamlab.rockefeller.edu/cgi-bin/Genetic_screens/screenfrontpage.cgi). A detailed description of the theoretical considerations behind this calculator is available (Shaham, 2007). There are also techniques to automate and expedite a forward genetic screen, including the Complex Object Parametric Analyzer
and Sorter (COPAS™), a device that sorts animals into individual wells, and microfluidic devices coupled to automated imaging
(Chung et al., 2008; Crane et al., 2012; Doitsidou et al., 2008).

Figure 1. A simple F2 screen. Depicted here is the simplest variation of an F2 screen, which involves isolating mutants with a phenotype of interest in
the second generation after mutagenesis. A population of young L4 hermaphrodites is mutagenized. F1 animals are collected,
and F2 single hermaphrodites are isolated, carrying a homozygous mutation in a gene of interest. Obtaining a mutation is a
rare event. The details of the scheme depend on the type of mutation sought. For a detailed description of different varieties
of F2 screens, consult Jorgensen and Mango (2002).

Once a mutant is identified, several strategies can be used to isolate the affected gene. In the past, two- and three-point
mapping with genetic markers was used to identify the affected region, although this method is not commonly employed today
(for a review, see WormBook chapter Classical genetic methods). Single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) mapping using the polymorphic Hawaiian isolate CB4856 is a more common approach (Wicks et al., 2001). Oligonucleotide array comparative genome hybridization (aCGH) has also been used successfully to identify point mutations
and deletions in complex pools of genomic DNA (Maydan et al., 2007; Maydan et al., 2009). In this case, custom-made arrays with overlapping 50-mer probes are used to identify SNPs and insertions or deletions (indels).
Whole-genome sequencing is now a cost-effective approach to gene mapping, and it can be combined with other mapping methods
for rapid gene identification (Doitsidou et al., 2010; Sarin et al., 2008; Zuryn et al., 2010). There is open-source software to aid in whole-genome sequencing data analysis and mutant identification, including Bowtie,
CloudMap, and galign, which are specifically tailored to the C. elegans genome (Langmead et al., 2009; Langmead and Salzberg, 2012; Minevich et al., 2012; Shaham, 2009).

2.2. Chemical mutagenesis

Chemical mutagenesis provides the easiest and most straightforward way to induce germline mutations at high frequency. Mutation
prevalence using chemicals is high enough that a relatively low number of haploid genomes must be interrogated to reach saturation.
The most widely used mutagens in C. elegans are ethyl methanesulfonate (EMS) and trimethylpsoralen with ultraviolet light (UV/TMP). There are, however, many others with
differing mutagenic spectra, including N-ethyl-N-nitrosourea (ENU), formaldehyde, nitrosoguanidine (NTG), diethyl sulfate
(DES), acetaldehyde, diepoxybutane (DEB) and diepoxyoctane (DEO). A cocktail of EMS/ENU has also been used to induce a spectrum
of mutations (Thompson et al., 2013). Special care should be taken when handling mutagens: working in a chemical hood and wearing proper personal protection
gear are a must. Consult the relevant Material Safety Data Sheet (MSDS) and your chemical waste department before beginning
a chemical genetic screen.

2.2.1. Ethyl methanesulfonate (EMS)

EMS is the most commonly used mutagen in C. elegans and by far the most potent (Brenner, 1974; Flibotte et al., 2010). A forward mutation rate as high as 2.5 × 10−3 mutations/gene/generation can be achieved with acceptable rates of sterility (Gengyo-Ando and Mitani, 2000). EMS is an alkylating agent and most commonly adds an ethyl group to guanine to form O6-ethylguanine (Brookes and Lawley, 1961). This modified guanine pairs inappropriately with thymine in subsequent replications (Coulondre and Miller, 1977). Therefore, mutagenesis is biased towards G/C to A/T transitions, respectively, which often leads to the generation of stop
codons (Flibotte et al., 2010). Therefore, these mutations are typically strong loss-of-function or null alleles. Roughly 13% of EMS lesions are deletions
or other chromosomal rearrangements (Anderson, 1995).

Synchronized L4 or young-adult hermaphrodites are washed with M9 buffer in a sterile 15 ml plastic tube. Spin down animals
at 700 × g for 1 min and remove supernatant. Wash animals at least 3x to remove bacteria. Resuspend animals in 2 ml M9. Add 2 ml of
a 2x stock solution of EMS (100 mM). Animals are incubated in a total volume of 4 ml of 50 mM EMS in M9 for 4 h at 20oC with constant rotation. EMS should be prepared immediately before use. Animals are then washed 5x with 15 ml M9 to remove
trace EMS. For standard F2 screens, plate mutagenized animals using a glass pipette on large NGM plates until F1 animals are
gravid. Bleach F1 animals, and plate F2 eggs on NGM plates. Score for the defects of interest at the appropriate developmental
stage. EMS is detoxified by addition of 1 M NaOH.

Synchronized L4 animals are washed 5x in 15 ml M9 to remove bacteria. Animals are then resuspended in 580 µl M9 buffer. Twenty
microliters of freshly made TMP (1 mg/ml in DMSO) is added to the culture, and animals are incubated in the dark for 15 min.
Pipette animals onto dry, unseeded, 9 cm NGM plates. Remove plate lids, and apply 360 µJ UV light. A Stratalinker® UV Crosslinker (Stratagene) is useful for this step, but calibrated hand-held UV lamps can be used as well (Yandell et al., 1994). Next, add OP50 directly on top of the mutagenized worms and recover for 5 h in the dark at 20oC. Continue as for EMS screens. A range of final concentrations of TMP (2 µg/ml to 30 µg/ml) is reported to be successful.
It is likely that variations depend on total UV exposure and variability between batches of TMP. Dose-response curves can
be used to optimize mutagenesis for each batch (Barstead and Moerman, 2006).

2.2.3. N-ethyl-N-nitrosourea (ENU)

ENU generates an array of molecular lesions, and it is therefore the mutagen of choice if allelic variability is important
(Flibotte et al., 2010). The mutagenicity of ENU occurs by transferring its ethyl moiety to nitrogen or oxygen on any of the four nucleotides, creating
modified DNA bases that later hinder proper replication (Goth and Rajewsky, 1972; Justice et al., 1999). All codons are equally mutable with ENU, so non-null alleles are often generated (De Stasio and Dorman, 2001). ENU has a slightly higher reversion frequency at around 2.6 × 10−4, compared to 1.1 × 10−4 using EMS (De Stasio and Dorman, 2001). The reversion frequency is the frequency at which a mutated phenotype reverts back to wild type. This is commonly a result
of a second site suppressor mutation. Because there are usually fewer suppressor genes, this frequency is lower than the forward
mutation rate (Greenwald and Horvitz, 1980).

ENU degrades to more toxic products when stored in aqueous solutions (De Stasio and Dorman, 2001). Stock solutions of 50 mM in absolute ethanol should therefore be kept at -20oC for no more than 2 weeks. Here it is useful to buy small aliquots of dry ENU and add ethanol directly to the bottle to make
the 50 mM solution (M. Edgley, personal communication). Working solutions (1.0 mM diluted in modified M9 buffer lacking ammonium
chloride) are made fresh immediately before use (De Stasio and Dorman, 2001). Synchronized late L4/young adult hermaphrodites are incubated with the working solution for 4 h at 20°C with constant rotation.
Animals are then washed 5x in M9 before plating on seeded NGM plates. Before discarding, ENU should be inactivated by adding
sodium thiosulfate and sodium hydroxide to a final concentration of 10% (w/v) and 1% (w/v), respectively, and incubated at
room temperature for 1 h.

EMS/ENU cocktail Protocol: The Million Mutation Project has used a cocktail of EMS and ENU to isolate mutations with a spectrum of lesions (Thompson et al., 2013). The same guidelines for each mutagen are used to prepare the mutagenic solution, and the final concentrations for mutagenesis
are 50 mM EMS and 1 mM ENU in M9 (M. Edgley, personal communication). Synchronized L4/young adult hermaphrodites are washed
into a 15 ml sterile tube. The animals are resuspended in 2 ml M9, and 2 ml of a 2x stock solution containing 100 mM EMS and
2 mM ENU are added. This solution is prepared fresh every time before use. The ENU stock solution (50 mM in absolute ethanol)
is prepared and stored the same way as described for ENU mutagenesis.

2.2.4. Other chemical mutagens

The following mutagens are used less often, but they can also be considered for a forward genetic screen. The mutation rates
given are rough estimates, as they are usually taken from only one or a few published screens. A thorough review of these
uncommon chemical mutagens has been previously published (Anderson, 1995). In all cases, synchronized L4/young adult hermaphrodites are used. Following treatment, mutagenized animals are washed
5x in M9 buffer and plated on seeded NGM plates, according to the screen strategy.

Formaldehyde generates deficiencies, as well as point mutations and complex lesions, but it is less effective than EMS (Moerman and Baillie, 1981). Working concentrations of 0.1% (w/v) provide the best trade-off between mutagenic capacity and toxicity (Johnsen and Baillie, 1988). Stock solutions (1% (w/v)) are stored at −20°C in M9. Hermaphrodites are subjected to mutagenesis for 4 h at 20°C, rotating.

Nitrosoguanidine (NTG) is an alkylating agent that most likely causes point mutations by mispairing of bases during DNA replication (Lawley and Thatcher, 1970). It is used at a concentration of 0.5 mg/ml to mutagenize animals at a rate of 1 × 10−4 mutations per haploid genome (Greenwald and Horvitz, 1980). This rate is about ten times lower than that of EMS. In other organisms, however, NTG is a potent mutagen, suggesting that
the best conditions for mutagenesis in C. elegans have not yet been determined (Anderson, 1995). Animals are incubated at 20°C for 1 h (Greenwald and Horvitz, 1980).

Acetaldehyde mutagenizes animals at a rate of approximately 1 × 10−4 mutations per haploid genome. Animals are incubated for 2 h at 20°C in 0.1% acetaldehyde in M9 (Greenwald and Horvitz, 1980).

1,2,7,8-diepoxyoctane (DEO) is a bi-functional alkylating agent that can generate large deletions, and it has an approximate mutation rate of 5
× 10−5 mutations per haploid genome. Hermaphrodites are incubated for 3 h in a freshly-made solution of 2 mM DEO in M9 (Anderson and Brenner, 1984).

1,2,3,4-diepoxybutane (DEB) has a similar reversion frequency to EMS. 15% of lesions are small deletions of 0.5-3.5 kb. Animals are incubated in
1 mM DEB in M9 buffer for 3 h at 20°C (Trent et al., 1991).

2.3. Radiation mutagenesis

High-energy radiation mutagenesis is not commonly employed for contemporary forward genetic screens. Researchers should, however,
consider such a method if large deletions or complex rearrangements are desired at a relatively high frequency (Muller, 1927).

2.3.1. Short-wave UV

Short-wave UV can induce chromosomal rearrangements, including deletions, translocations and duplications. DNA absorbs UV
light, which causes adjacent pyrimidines to dimerize (Freeman et al., 1989). Lesions are then induced following inaccurate trans-lesion synthesis during replication (Bailly et al., 1994). UV mutagenesis has been used successfully to generate mutations at a rate of 2 × 10−4 mutations per haploid genome per generation (Greenwald and Horvitz, 1980). However, another study found that UV-C radiation had a low rate of mutation with a decrease in fertility, so more hermaphrodites
should be used initially (Gengyo-Ando and Mitani, 2000). The reduction in brood size after irradiation was as high as 20% compared to unirradiated animals (Stewart et al., 1991). Young adult animals on uncovered, unseeded plates are irradiated with 120 W/m2 at 254 nm. Irradiated animals are allowed to expel eggs that were present prior to mutagenesis and are moved to new plates
after 2 h (Stewart et al., 1991).

2.3.2. Ionizing radiation

Ionizing radiation (IR) includes X- and γ-rays and generates very large deletions that may span several genes at rates of
2 × 10−4 to 9 × 10−4 (Anderson, 1995; Meneely and Herman, 1979; Sigurdson et al., 1984). IR also induces complex rearrangements including chromosomal duplications, translocations, and inversions. The lesions
most likely differ from UV-induced lesions, as IR appears to have no nucleotide bias (Stewart et al., 1991). Synchronized L4/young adult hermaphrodites are irradiated with 1500 Roentgen and plated as needed. This method can recover
non-lethal complex lesions (Rosenbluth et al., 1985). Alternatively, an F1 clonal screen can be used to isolate lethal alterations.

2.3.3. 32P decay

Sydney Brenner used 32P decay to generate some of the first C. elegans mutants (Babu and Brenner, 1981; Brenner, 1974). Mutations are generated at rates of 2.8 × 10−2 to 3.9 × 10−3 per haploid genome. 32P is incorporated uniformly into genomic DNA, and mutation is caused by 32P-transmutation in the genome, rather than by β-particle emission (Babu and Brenner, 1981). 32P is mixed with unlabeled phosphate and added directly to phosphate-free NGM plates at 10 Ci/mol (not a typo)! The plates
are seeded with NA22, a radioactive-resistant strain of bacteria (Anderson, 1995). Freshly hatched larvae are added to the radioactive plates and grown at 15°C for 5 days. F1 animals are collected and plated
on standard NGM plates seeded with OP50 as above (Babu and Brenner, 1981). As a considerable amount of radioactive waste is generated using this method, consult your institute's radioactive waste
management facility prior to beginning.

Figure 2. An insertional mutagenesis screen for isolating genes disrupted by a transposon. In insertional mutagenesis, transposons (Tc1, and more commonly Mos1) are mobilized in an appropriate strain background (mutator background or strain expressing Mos1-transposase). The transposon (orange) inserts randomly throughout the genome, via the transposase (gray), typically at a
TA dinucleotide. DNA is isolated from animals that exhibit the phenotype of interest. Using inverse PCR, the DNA is cut with
a restriction enzyme (RE) that is abundant throughout the genome and self-ligated. PCR is performed using two primers (A and
B) within the transposon, elongating in opposite directions. PCR products (final panel) are size selected and sequenced to
determine the position of insertion.

While generating mutations by chemical or radiation-induced mutagenesis is simple, identification of the relevant molecular
lesion may not be. Major advances in SNP mapping and whole genome sequencing have made gene identification easier, yet these
methods can be time consuming and labor intensive. This is especially the case when weakly penetrant or behavioral mutants
are studied. In both cases, phenotype can only be established by scoring populations of animals, often requiring F3 or F4
animals to be evaluated. In these cases, non-directed insertional mutagenesis using transposons becomes a useful alternative.

There are several caveats to consider before performing a genome-wide screen using insertional mutagenesis. The Bristol reference
strain N2 has 30 copies of Tc1 already present in the background, complicating identification of the causal lesion (Emmons et al., 1983). Both Tc1 and Mos1 have a bias for TA insertion sites; this makes transposons prone to inserting into introns, which may not inactivate the
nearby gene or may be spliced out during transcription (Granger et al., 2004; Mori et al., 1988; Rushforth and Anderson, 1996). Mos1 has about a 10x lower mutation rate than EMS, meaning that ten times as many animals need to be scored to identify a phenotype
of interest (Williams et al., 2005). Some mutations also occur as a result of ‘hit-and-run’ events, where transposon insertion and subsequent removal causes
small indels to disrupt a gene (Boulin and Bessereau, 2007; Williams et al., 2005). These events greatly complicate gene identification. Because of these disadvantages, transposon-based insertional mutagenesis
screening is used less often. Mos1-based methods are preferred. There are Tc1-derived alleles available from the CGC, so the descriptions below provide an overview
of how those alleles were obtained.

2.4.1. Tc1-mediated transposition

C. elegans strains carry endogenous transposons, which have been used to perform a whole-genome insertional mutagenesis screen. Of the
six endogenous, active transposons, Tc1 and Tc3 are screened most often, as these have the highest copy number in N2. All
transposons, however, are active in most mutator backgrounds (Martin et al., 2002). Tc1 uses TA as an integration site, but with a relaxed target site specificity (Mori et al., 1988).

Prior to screening, a mutator strain is backcrossed four times to the strain that will be mutagenized. Outcrossing limits
the number of Tc1 copies already present in the mutator strain and removes any extraneous mutations prior to screening. Animals
are allowed to grow for ten generations to accumulate mutations and are then screened for defects of interest (Martin et al., 2002). Once the phenotype is confirmed, strains are immediately outcrossed to the parental strain. This removes the mutator locus
and prevents transposon excision from the gene of interest. Transposon insertion sites are identified similar to Mos1 identification below. Since there are multiple copies of Tc1 in the background, SNP mapping is helpful in determining the chromosome of interest
and reducing the possible number of candidate genes. As is the case for Mos1, most insertions occur in intergenic regions and introns, but a small percentage also appear in exons (van der Linden and Plasterk, 2004).

2.4.2. Mos1-mediated transposition

Mos1 was originally isolated from Drosophila mauritiana (Jacobson et al., 1986). The consensus insertion site is the dinucleotide TA, in the context of an ATATAT sequence. Mos1, however, can insert in sequences lacking the consensus site. 50% of insertions map near or within genes (Granger et al., 2004). Intron insertion bias is observed, presumably because these tend to be T/A rich; however, 20% of insertions still occur
within coding regions (Granger et al., 2004). Mutagenesis rates are an order of magnitude lower than chemical mutagenesis. As a result, ten times as many F1 animals
must be screened to identify lesions in a given gene (Williams et al., 2005). It is advisable to start with a small pilot screen using EMS first. This determines an approximate number of mutants expected
and ensures that an insertional screen is feasible (Boulin and Bessereau, 2007). Additionally, 6-15% of transposon-induced mutations arise through a ‘hit-and-run’ mechanism, in which the transposon imprecisely
excises before the transposase becomes inactive (Boulin and Bessereau, 2007; Williams et al., 2005). On average, 2.5 insertions are generated per line, but as many as ten insertions in a single strain have been detected
(Boulin and Bessereau, 2007). Mos1 has a length of 1.3 kb, so alleles generated tend to be strong loss-of-function. Hypomorphs can be generated if the transposon
is inserted into regulatory sequences (Boulin and Bessereau, 2007).

The Mos1 transposase and transposon array are maintained as extrachromosomal arrays in two different strains (EG2762 and EG1470).
These are maintained as separate stocks to block spontaneous transposon insertions. EG2762 carries the Mos1 transposase under the control of a heat-inducible promoter, and a coelomocyte GFP marker. EG1470 has a pharynx GFP marker
and the Mos1 transposon. Immediately prior to the start of the screen, the two strains are crossed to generate doubly transgenic animals.
After one generation, the doubly transgenic strain is split into two populations. One population is used to test transposition
frequency following heat shock to ensure that silencing of the transposon array in the germline has not occurred. The other
is amplified for an additional 2-4 generations. Once transposition has been confirmed, the amplified doubly transgenic animals
are subjected to a heat pulse in a 33°C water bath for 1 h, followed by 1 h incubation at 20°C, followed by another 1 h heat
shock. Animals are recovered at 20°C for 12 h, transferred onto fresh plates and grown at 20°C. F1 progeny are picked 24 h
to 36 h after heat shocks. For a comprehensive protocol and useful tips, see (Boulin and Bessereau, 2007).

3. Target-selected mutagenesis

Target-selected mutagenesis is used to identify mutations in a specific gene from a randomly mutagenized genome. The approach
involves standard mutagenesis using EMS or UV/TMP, for example, followed by screening using the polymerase chain reaction
(PCR) or other method to identify animals carrying lesions in the gene of interest.

Two community consortia, the C. elegans Knockout Consortium (celeganskoconsortium.omrf.org), and the C. elegans National Bioresource Project of Japan (NBRP, http://www.shigen.nig.ac.jp/c.elegans/mutants/index.jsp) are currently using target-selected mutagenesis to identify mutant alleles for every gene in the C. elegans genome (C. elegansDeletion Mutant Consortium, 2012). Together, over 6,700 deletion or null alleles have been isolated by these groups and are available to the scientific community
(C. elegansDeletion Mutant Consortium, 2012). Strains from the C. elegans Knockout Consortium are available from the Caenorhabditis Genetics Center (CGC, http://www.cbs.umn.edu/research/resources/cgc) under the allele designation ok or gk. Strains generated by the NBRP, with allele designation tm, are available after submission of a Materials Transfer Agreement (Mitani, 2009). Deletion strains are listed on Wormbase, which should be consulted first to determine if an allele is already available for a gene of interest. If not, one may request
a deletion strain from the Consortium. Upon receiving a strain, it should be outcrossed to remove irrelevant mutations. It
is always important to verify the presence of the mutation in a strain. In addition, deletion mutations obtained by target-selection
can be accompanied by proximal duplications, resulting in obligate heterozygosity for the gene under consideration. In these
situations, phenotypic assessment of the mutant strain may not reveal the defects associated with complete gene loss. To confirm
that a gene of interest is responsible for an observed defect, transgenic rescue experiments should be performed and/or multiple
alleles examined (C. elegansDeletion Mutant Consortium, 2012). In addition to the collection of deletions, the Million Mutations Project (http://genome.sfu.ca/mmp/) has identified over 800,000 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and over 16,000 indels in more than 20,000 genes (C. elegansDeletion Mutant Consortium, 2012; Thompson et al., 2013). While some of these SNPs do not affect gene function, many may provide useful structure-function data.

3.1. Target-selected mutagenesis using PCR

The goal of target-selected mutagenesis is to generate a library containing pools of mutagenized animals that can be screened
for specific DNA lesions. Deletion alleles are easier to identify using PCR than point mutations, so UV/TMP and EMS are the
preferred mutagens (Lesa, 2006). For library construction, 600,000 hermaphrodites are randomly mutagenized. Once the mutagenized animals become gravid,
they are bleached and L1s are allowed to hatch in M9, overnight. The L1s are then subdivided into 1,152 subcultures (55 mm
NGM plates) of 500 animals each. After two generations of self-fertilization, 20% of the animals per plate are rinsed off
for genomic DNA isolation into twelve 96-well plates (Lesa, 2006). The remaining animals are stored at 15°C for up to six weeks. Although libraries can be frozen, live-animal libraries are
less prone to failures in mutant recovery (Lesa, 2006).

Three approaches are commonly used to search for deletions in a gene of interest: restricted PCR conditions, poison primers,
and thermostable restriction enzymes. Each approach employs nested PCR primers designed to flank the genomic sequence of interest
to increase specificity, and each method favors amplification of deletion products over larger wild-type products (Edgley et al., 2002; Jansen et al., 1997; Wei et al., 2002; Zwaal et al., 1993). All of these methods are prone to high false positive rates (50%-90%); therefore, each pooled sample should be screened
in duplicate (Jansen et al., 1997). A comprehensive protocol for library creation and the poison primer PCR technique is available in the Reverse genetics chapter in WormBook.

Each library pool is incubated first with a primer pair (10 pmol per primer) designed 2.5-3.5 kb apart over a region of interest,
followed by incubation of a 1:500 dilution of the first PCR with a nested primer pair (Liu et al., 1999). After addition of polymerase, nucleotides and buffer, samples are cycled with short extension times (45 s to 1 min) to
favor accumulation of the deletion product (Jansen et al., 1997). DNA polymerases have specific turnover rates (maximum number of nucleotides polymerized in a given amount of time), which
vary depending on the type of Taq used (Kornberg and Baker, 1992). For example, if the wild-type (WT) product is 2 kb, the deletion product is 500 bp, and the Taq polymerase has a turnover
rate of 1 kb/min, approximately two min will be needed to complete the WT reaction and 30 sec for the deletion product. If
the extension time is limited to 45 s, only the deletion product will be amplified. Over many rounds, some WT product is amplified,
but at a much slower rate than the deletion. This greatly increases the odds of detecting the less abundant deletion allele.
Detected deletions are variable in extent and average around 1.4 kb in size (Liu et al., 1999). Completed reactions are run on an agarose gel, and pools that have a product smaller than the wild-type product are identified.
Library animals from this pool are plated either singly or in smaller pools and retested to identify single hermaphrodites
carrying the relevant lesion (Jansen et al., 1997).

This approach was developed to enrich for deletions that are less than 500 bp in size (Edgley et al., 2002). The protocol is similar to that for the restricted PCR extension time method, except that a third primer is added between
the external primers of the first PCR (Figure 3). This poison primer is designed to amplify only off of wild-type genomic DNA, competing with the full-length wild-type product,
thereby reducing the quantity of wild-type template available for the second PCR. The second set of nested primers is only
able to bind the deleted product and the full-length wild-type product, whose total concentration is halved because of the
poison primer product. This leads to a 500-fold increase in sensitivity by enhancing the ratio of deletion to wild-type products.
Use of a short extension time (45 s) also facilitates synthesis of the deletion product. Because the poison primer determines
the location of amplified deletion products, it is usually best to target the 5’ end of a gene to generate null alleles (Edgley et al., 2002).

Figure 3. Poison primer method for detecting deletions. This technique enriches rare, deleted DNA over the more abundant, full-length, wild-type product. Primers a, b, and p are
used in the first PCR to generate a wild-type template, a mutant template, and a ‘poison’ template. In the second PCR, these
products are used as template with primers a’ and b’ to increase the signal of the deleted product. Without the poison primer,
full-length product dominates the PCR reaction, and the deletion product is below the detection limit. When the poison primer
is included, total full-length amplification is decreased, and the deletion product is revealed.

In this less commonly used method, sequences in a target gene are identified that have a thermostable restriction enzyme recognition
site in the interval spanned by the primer pairs (Wei et al., 2002). These enzymes are stable at high temperatures, making them ideal to use with PCR. Pooled genomic DNA is digested for 2
h before PCR to cleave genomic DNA and reduce the amount of wild-type template available. The enzymes are also included during
the PCR amplifications to continuously cleave any wild-type product. Two sets of nested primers are used. Targeted deletion
sequences lack the restriction enzyme site and are not cleaved, thereby increasing the sensitivity of the reaction (Wei et al., 2002). Deletions ranging from 330 bp to 1.7 kb have been found using this method (Huang et al., 2006; Wei et al., 2002). Validated thermostable restriction enzymes include PspGI, TliI, BstUI, ApeKI, and Tsp45I (Huang et al., 2006; Wei et al., 2002).

3.2. TILLING

TILLING (Targeting Induced Local Lesions IN Genomes) allows the identification of point mutations and small indels in a gene
of interest (McCallum et al., 2000). Originally developed in Arabidopsis thaliana, TILLING uses a single-strand DNA nuclease to determine the location of mismatches after hybridizing a mutated genome to
a non-mutated genome (Colbert et al., 2001; Till et al., 2003). While this method has only been used once to isolate point mutations in a gene of interest in C. elegans, it has been used more in other organisms. Mutations in a population of C. elegans are generated using EMS or ENU (Gilchrist et al., 2006). PCR targeting a gene of interest is performed on genomic DNA derived from many pools of animals (Figure 4). Primers are tagged with different fluorophores, marking the 5’ and 3’ ends of the product with different colors. After
PCR, the DNA in each reaction is denatured. Reannealing then allows heteroduplex formation between wild-type and mutant DNA.
Reannealed DNA is incubated with a single-strand DNA nuclease, CEL1, derived from celery juice extract (CJE) (Till et al., 2004). CJE cuts heteroduplex DNA where a mismatch or indel creates a single-stranded bulge. Samples are run on denaturing LI-COR
gels, and the gels are examined in both fluorescent channels to determine in which pool a mismatch occurs (Gilchrist et al., 2006). In a screen for ten genes (ranging from 788 bp to 9.1 kb in size), 71 mutations were identified. Of these, 59% constituted
missense alleles, and 3% were nonsense alleles (Gilchrist et al., 2006).

Figure 4. TILLING allows identification of point mutations in pools of mutated DNA. Both mutated DNA and wild-type DNA are subjected to PCR, using differentially labeled 5’ and 3’ primers (here in green and
red). The PCR products are denatured and reannealed slowly, so that heteroduplex DNA forms between a mutated DNA strand and
a wild-type DNA strand. The reannealed PCR products are treated with Cel1, an enzyme that specifically cleaves heteroduplex
DNA. The reaction is visualized on a LI-COR gel in two fluorescence channels. When heteroduplex DNA is cut, smaller DNA fragments
are seen in both the green and red channels within the same lane. Full-length, uncut product will be prominent at the top
of the gel.

Individual mutagenized F1 animals are plated singly onto 1500 seeded NGM plates. After the food supply is expended, half of
the animals are frozen at −80°C. The other half are used to generate genomic DNA individually into 96-well plates. To reduce
the number of PCR reactions, eight F1 DNA samples are pooled together for analysis. Once a positive pool has been identified,
DNA genomic samples are assayed individually to determine from which plate the sample originally arose. PCR primers are designed
over an area of 1.5 kb, mainly encompassing exonic regions. Primers can be designed using the program CODDLE to select for
regions high in G/C content, which are most prone to mutation by EMS (Gilchrist et al., 2006).

3.3. G4 DNA-induced deletion mutagenesis

The consensus sequence G3+N1-7G3+N1-7G3+ N1-7G3+ folds in vitro to form a guanine quadruplex (G4) structure that may block replication in vivo (Kruisselbrink et al., 2008). The FANCJ protein (DOG-1 in C. elegans) is a DNA helicase required for proper replication of such guanine-rich tracts (Kruisselbrink et al., 2008). In dog-1 mutants, these tracts are prone to 5’ deletions. There are more than 2,900 guanine quadruplex sites in the C. elegans genome, annotated in Wormbase under “G4 Motif” in GBrowse, and over 1,600 genes are located 5’ of a G4 site (Pontier et al., 2009). Of ten genes assayed in one study, 11 deletion alleles were generated, most of which were up to several kilobases upstream
of the G4 site targeted (Pontier et al., 2009). This method has been used once to generate deletion alleles (Pontier et al., 2009).

dog-1(pk2247) mutants are picked to individual NGM plates and allowed to grow until no OP50 remains on the plate (Pontier et al., 2009). Half of the animals on each plate are rinsed off with M9 for genomic DNA isolation. Prior to DNA isolation, animals are
split into two groups. If a deletion is present in only one of the samples, it probably arose from a somatic event. However,
if a deletion is detected in both samples, it is most likely a heritable mutation (Pontier et al., 2009). Deletions are screened using any of the PCR protocols described above. After isolation, the strain is outcrossed to wild-type
animals to remove the dog-1 mutation and any off-target deletions.

4. Gene-targeted mutagenesis

Gene-targeted mutagenesis methods seek to generate lesions in a specific gene of interest without mutagenesis of the entire
genome. Nonetheless, strains generated with these methods should still be outcrossed before performing genetic studies, as
off-target lesions can occasionally occur. In general, however, the mutational load is much lower than that inflicted with
chemical or radiation mutagenesis.

4.1. Transposon-based methods

4.1.1. Tc1-mediated gene conversion and deletion

Transposon-mediated, transgene-directed gene conversion using Tc1 can generate specific alleles in a target gene, albeit at
lower frequencies than Mos1 (Bessereau et al., 2001). Tc1-based methods are not commonly used anymore with the advent of single insertion Mos1 strains. Some historic alleles were obtained using Tc1, so the following protocol serves as reference for how those alleles
were generated. Tc1-based methods require that a transposon is located near or in the gene of interest. Once such a strain
is identified, one can either screen for excision events that remove part of the gene, or introduce a mutated transgene to
direct gene conversion.

Protocol:

For isolating deletion events, animals containing a Tc1 insertion in the gene of interest are crossed into a mutator background
(e.g.,mut-2), and at least 100 animals are individually plated and allowed to self for two to three generations (Zwaal et al., 1993). Half of the animals on each plate are washed off for DNA isolation, and screened for deletions using PCR. If a deletion
is detected, individual animals from the remaining half are plated individually and assayed for the presence of the deletion.
Typical excision rates are 10−3 per gene per generation (Kagan et al., 1997). Once a deletion has been identified, the strain is outcrossed several times to the wild-type strain to remove mut-2 and any extraneous mutations.

For transgene-directed gene conversion, the protocol is similar, except that a transgene with homology to sequences flanking
the transposon insertion site is injected into the gonad first. The transgene is engineered with a point mutation, deletion
or GFP insertion (Barrett et al., 2004; Plasterk and Groenen, 1992). Progeny are then screened for homologous recombination from the engineered transgene by PCR. Gene deletions of 0.85 kb
to 1.5 kb have been targeted successfully in a mut-2 background, with a frequency of 1/2666 animals undergoing gene conversion with a small deletion template (Barrett et al., 2004).

4.1.2. Mos1-based gene conversion and deletion

Mos1 excision-induced Transgene-Instructed gene Conversion (MosTIC) introduces specific point mutations, small deletions, and
insertions (e.g., of GFP) into a C. elegans gene of interest (Robert and Bessereau, 2007). A strain containing a genomic Mos1-insertion near or in a target gene is identified. The NemaGENETAG Consortium created a collection of over 13,000 Mos1-tagged alleles (Bazopoulou and Tavernarakis, 2009; Vallin et al., 2012). The Mos1-insertion strains are annotated on MosLocator (http://www.ciml.univ-mrs.fr/applications/MosLocator/) and Wormbase, and they are available to researchers through the Consortium (http://ums3421.univ-lyon1.fr/). Once the strain of interest is received, it is transformed with a transposase used to remobilize the transposon and with
a transgene containing a repair template with a specific mutation in the region of the Mos1 insertion. Excision of the Mos1 element following transposase expression can then be repaired by homologous recombination with the provided repair template,
thus introducing specific lesions into the genome. Gene conversion events occur at approximately 2 × 10−4 events per F1 animal isolated, so one would need to screen at least 5000 animals to isolate one successful conversion event
(Robert and Bessereau, 2007). A similar strategy, MosDEL, can be used to introduce large deletions at specific sites (Figure 5) (Frøkjaer-Jensen et al., 2010). Deletions of up to 25 kb have been generated using the MosDEL method, at efficiencies of approximately 20% of injected worms,
such that in 30 positively-selected, transgenic worms, six will carry the targeted deletion (Frøkjaer-Jensen et al., 2012). 99.4% of all genes in the C. elegans genome are within 25 kb of at least one Mos1 element in strains generated by the NemaGENETAG, with a median distance of 3.1 kb, essentially making all genes targetable by this method (Frøkjaer-Jensen et al., 2010). The related MosSCI method, which also uses homologous repair after excision, can be used to introduce single copies of
a transgene into a specific genomic site, but it is not a mutagenic technique (Frøkjaer-Jensen et al., 2012; Frøkjaer-Jensen et al., 2008).

Figure 5. Targeted gene deletions using transposons. To generate a targeted gene deletion, a transposase and a rescuing transgene containing a selection marker (in this case,
unc-119) is injected into an unc-119 mutant animal carrying a transposon insertion near or in a gene of interest. Typically, strains carrying a single Mos1 insertion near a gene of interest are obtained from the NemaGENETAG Consortium (Bazopoulou and Tavernarakis, 2009; Vallin et al., 2012). Homology-directed repair after a double-strand break (DSB) occurs off the introduced transgene at low frequencies. unc-119(+) is inserted into the genome, and in the case of MosDEL, some portion of the gene is deleted, typically the 5’ region of the
gene. In MosTIC, the transgene contains a small insertion, deletion, or point mutation, which is incorporated into the genomic
DNA.

Protocol:

MosTIC: (Robert, 2012) The transgene for repair is designed to contain point mutations, small deletions, or insertions in a region spanning about
1 kb around the Mos1 insertion site. These modifications should be flanked by at least 1.5 kb of genomic sequence homology to facilitate recombination.
This repair transgene (50 ng/µl) is introduced into the Mos1-containing strain via DNA microinjection, along with a hsp::Transposase plasmid (50 ng/µl) and a co-injection marker (Robert, 2012). After a line is established, approximately 200 transgenic animals undergo Mos1 excision for 1 h at 33°C. Animals are allowed to recover for 1 h at 15°C, and then shifted once more for 1 h to 33°C. After
recovery overnight, bleach gravid hermaphrodites and collect the F1s. Plate 100 F1s per plate over many NGM plates and allow
to self-fertilize for 2 generations (Robert, 2012). Alternatively, one to five heat-shocked P0 animals may be plated to generate 100 F1 animals per plate (Robert and Bessereau, 2007). After, proceed with a PCR screening strategy as above (Section 4.1.1). One may also screen by phenotype using a different plating strategy if the phenotype is known. The gene conversion event
should still be confirmed by PCR, as false positives may arise (Robert, 2012). Expression of the transposase directly under a germline promoter (eft-3) rather the heat shock promoter increases efficiency, using a protocol similar to that for MosDEL outlined below (Frøkjaer-Jensen et al., 2012; Robert, 2012).

MosDEL: (Frøkjaer-Jensen et al., 2010) The overall protocol for MosDEL is similar to that for MosTIC. Targeting transgenes used for MosDEL should have one homology
arm containing 2 kb of DNA directly adjacent to one side of the Mos1 insertion site. The other homology arm should have at least 3 kb of DNA targeting sequence upstream, chosen to mark the end
point of the deletion (Frøkjaer-Jensen et al., 2010). Within the homology arms, GFP, C. briggsaeunc-119(+), or an antibiotic-resistance gene can be inserted as a positive selection marker (Frøkjaer-Jensen et al., 2012; Giordano-Santini et al., 2010; Semple et al., 2010; Semple et al., 2012). One advantage of unc-119(+) is that it can act as a balancer in case the deletion results in lethality when homozygous. Also, unc-119 mutant animals are unable to form dauers and die in starvation conditions, which further aids screening (Maduro and Pilgrim, 1995; Praitis et al., 2001). The C. briggsaeunc-119 sequence is used because it is smaller than the C. elegans coding region, but it still rescues unc-119 mutants (Frøkjaer-Jensen et al., 2010). The injection mix should contain the repair plasmid (50 ng/µl), a Mos1 transposase under the eft-3 promoter to drive germ line expression (50 ng/µl, (Frøkjaer-Jensen et al., 2012)) and co-injection markers (at least three different, well-expressed markers to reduce false positives) (Frøkjaer-Jensen et al., 2012). Deletion mutants are isolated by picking unc-119(+), GFP(+), or antibiotic-resistant animals that do not express the co-injection markers. A negative selection marker such as
peel-1 may be included as a co-injection marker to increase the efficiency of screening after a Mos1 event (Frøkjaer-Jensen et al., 2012). peel-1 is placed under a heat-shock promoter, and is induced for 2 h at 34°C. Transgenic animals carrying the array are killed,
while animals that have lost the transgene survive. This selection will aid in screening for animals that lost the co-injection
markers but repaired off the transgene successfully (Frøkjaer-Jensen et al., 2012). Deletions are confirmed by PCR and sequencing. The repair template may be engineered to contain Flp recombinase sites,
so that the positive selection marker may be removed in somatic cells to create a clean deletion (Vazquez-Manrique et al., 2010).

Figure 6. Molecular scissors can be used to engineer small insertion and deletions into a genome. A. Zinc finger nucleases (ZFNs) consist of three tandem Zinc finger domains (colored umbrellas) fused to a FokI nuclease (gray). FokI acts as a dimer, and specifically cleaves genomic DNA when two ZFNs are targeted in tandem. B. TALENs are similar to ZFNs,
except that a single domain recognizes a single nucleotide, so one of four domains is fused together according to the genomic
sequence. The nuclease is traditionally FokI (gray), functioning as a dimer, although monomeric TALENs using I-TevI have recently been reported (Beurdeley et al., 2013). C. The CRISPR system uses a single guide RNA (red) to target a region of interest for cleavage. The Cas9 nuclease (green)
recognizes aspects of the secondary structure of the single guide RNA and the RNA:DNA hybrid. Cas9 also requires a protospacer
motif, NGG, to cleave the DNA.

TALENs function like ZFNs, except that tandem TAL domains are fused to a FokI protein (Figure 6B). TAL domains allow a much greater freedom in choosing a DNA sequence to target (Miller et al., 2011). Each domain is tailored to a specific nucleotide, rather than a tri-nucleotide sequence. The TAL code is modular (Boch et al., 2009; Moscou and Bogdanove, 2009), allowing targeted nucleases to be generated at lower cost using Golden Gate cloning, which compiles multiple DNA fragments
in an ordered fashion by traditional cloning techniques (Cermak et al., 2011). An improvement to the system has been reported by fusing a single TAL domain to the catalytic domain of an I-TevI homing
endonuclease, allowing the enzyme to function as a monomer (Beurdeley et al., 2013). Although not yet used in C. elegans, it may allow TALEN mRNA to be injected at lower concentrations and be more effective (see Protocol below).

In prokaryotes, the Clustered Regularly Interspaced Short Palindromic Repeats (CRISPR) and CRISPR-associated (Cas) system
is an adaptive immune response against viruses and plasmids (reviewed in Wiedenheft et al., 2012). The cell uses an RNA guide to cleave foreign DNA sequences (Figure 6C). The minimum components required to obtain cleavage in vitro for the Type II CRISPR system are the Cas9 nuclease from Streptococcus pyogenes and a synthetic single guide RNA (sgRNA) composed of a short CRISPR RNA (crRNA) and a trans-activating CRISPR RNA (tracrRNA)
(Jinek et al., 2012). Genomic specificity is provided by a 20-bp sequence within the crRNA, whose only constraint is the trinucleotide NGG (Protospacer-Adjacent
Motif or PAM) after the 3′ end of the sequence. In genomic editing, after successful targeting by the sgRNA, Cas9 introduces
a double-strand break 3 bp upstream of the PAM site, which may introduce indels after error-prone non-homologous end joining
(NHEJ) or can repair off an introduced transgene using homology directed repair (HDR). To promote HDR over NHEJ, Cas9 can
be converted into a nickase (Cas9n) by a single amino acid substitution (Cong et al., 2013; Mali et al., 2013). Off-target lesions have been recovered in studies using human cell culture, and single and double mismatches appear to
be tolerated in some systems (Fu et al., 2013; Cradick et al., 2013). While no off-target effects have been reported for studies in C. elegans (Dickinson et al., 2013; Chiu et al., 2013), it is good practice to backcross the mutant animal to remove any possible undesired lesions. To increase fidelity and
reduce off-target hits, two Cas9n enzymes can be used together to target a genomic locus (Ran et al., 2013). One Cas9n nicks the sense strand, while the other nickase targets the anti-sense strand, with an offset of the two sgRNAs
between 0 and 20 bp. Double nicking creates 5′ overhangs that may be repaired by NHEJ and introduce lesions. This method was
found to greatly decrease off-target lesions in mice zygotes and human cell culture by 50 to 1500 fold (Ran et al., 2013). Additionally, because of the small size of the targeting constructs, multiple loci can be edited at once (Cong et al., 2013).

When ZFNs and TALENs were initially tried in C. elegans, germline cleavage was difficult to obtain: ZFN-directed cleavage only occurred in somatic cells (Morton et al., 2006). However, a recently developed protocol uses mRNA constructs for injection into the germ line, and heritable gene changes
occur in approximately 5% of progeny (Wood et al., 2011). While only a few studies have used ZFNs and TALENs to generate targeted deletions, these new protocol adjustments greatly
improve efficiency. Help designing chimeric proteins can be found at http://www.zincfingers.org/ for ZFNs and at tale-nt.cac.cornell.edu for TALENs.

ZFN or TALEN mRNAs that target a gene of interest are injected at low pressure directly into the hermaphrodite gonad (Wood et al., 2011). The mRNAs have 5’ and 3’ UTRs to increase germ line translation efficacy, as well as a 5’ cap and a 3’ polyA tail. ZFN
mRNAs are injected at 250 ng/µl per construct (total concentration of 500 ng/µl). TALENs are injected at 1500 ng/µl per construct.
F1 animals with the highest likelihood of changes in a target gene arise 10-14 h after injection, with 3.5%-5% of the progeny
acquiring a small indel during this 4 h period. F2 animals derived from these F1 animals are screened either by phenotype
or by PCR (Wood et al., 2011).

CRISPR/Cas9 has been successfully adapted for use in C. elegans and allows for rapid mutant recovery, creation of tagged versions of endogenous loci, and the implementation of conditional
knock-outs and knock-ins. Generation of the sgRNA requires minimal cloning (Friedland et al., 2013), and transgene assembly is facilitated by Gibson cloning techniques (Gibson et al., 2009). While some constraints on the target DNA may exist beyond the PAM requirement, CRISPR/Cas allows virtually any gene to
be removed and edited with precision and fidelity.

For generation of mutant alleles of a gene of interest, clone a target DNA sequence containing G/A(N)19NGG, preferably within the coding region and towards the 5′ end of the gene (Friedland et al., 2013) under the U6 promoter. It is also useful if the region of interest to be deleted contains a restriction site for easier
mutant screening (Friedland et al., 2013). Inject a DNA plasmid mixture into young adult hermaphrodites using standard techniques. This mixture should contain an
NLS-Cas9 under the eft-3 promoter and a tbb-2 3′UTR for efficient germline expression (50 ng/μl), sgRNA sequence under the U6 promoter (45 ng/μl), and a co-injection marker
(e.g., myo-3p::mCherry, 5 ng/μl) (Friedland et al., 2013). Isolate F1 animals expressing the co-injection marker and screen their progeny for deletions in the gene of interest using
any of the previously discussed techniques.

A similar protocol is used for engineering in specific deletions, point mutations or GFP knock-ins off a transgene following
a DSB (Dickinson et al., 2013). The repair transgene should contain at least 1.5 kb of homology regions flanking the desired change, and a selection marker,
such as unc-119(+) or antibiotic selection, which may itself be flanked by loxP sites (Dickinson et al., 2013). A single plasmid containing coding sequences for Cas9 and the sgRNA is injected at 50 ng/μl. The repair template is injected
at 10 ng/μl, and co-injection markers, including negative selection using peel-1, are included in the mix. Injected hermaphrodites are singled to individual plates and allowed to grow to starvation, in
the case of unc-119(+) selection (Dickinson et al., 2013). Plates containing non-Unc progeny are heat shocked at 34oC for 4 h to induce peel-1 negative selection. Non-Unc animals are then singled to establish lines (Dickinson et al., 2013). While current studies in C. elegans have used a double-strand break to repair off a transgene, work in mice and human cell cultures suggest that using a nickase
version or a double nickase system may increase the efficiency of transgene introduction (Ran et al., 2013). The Cas9 and sgRNA plasmids from (Friedland et al., 2013) and (Dickinson et al., 2013) are available on AddGene.

5. Summary

An array of random and directed genome alteration methods are available in C. elegans, and the choice of which method to use largely depends on the biological problem at hand. Chemical mutagenesis is generally
useful for defining genes associated with a particular biological process, as are methods involving random generation of deletions
and transposon insertions. Reverse genetic methods are utilized when the functions of specific genes are sought. Because all
of the methods described here rely on random processes for mutation generation, screening of large numbers of animals is generally
unavoidable. Thus, before embarking on mutagenesis, care should be taken to optimize screen design. Finally, it is imperative
that the assignment of phenotype to gene be rigorously demonstrated. A good rule to follow is that two independent assays
should corroborate an assignment. For example, rescue studies and allele identification, multiple alleles, or RNAi and allele
isolation are all reasonable combinations confirming gene assignment.

6. Acknowledgements

We thank Don Moerman and Mark Edgley for sharing detailed EMS/ENU cocktail mutagenesis protocols. We thank Oliver Hobert for
soliciting helpful comments on the manuscript. This work was funded in part by NIH grants NS081490, NS064273, and NS073121
to S.S., and also in part by NRSA Training Grant #GM066699 to L.M.K.